
First Year Baby Milestones
What Matters, What Doesn’t, and When to Chill
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Narrateur(s):
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Grace Rice
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Auteur(s):
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Tamsin Haleshenk
À propos de cet audio
Becoming a parent transforms you. From the moment your baby arrives, the pace of life shifts. Time begins to move in strange new ways—excruciatingly slow during sleepless nights and impossibly fast when you realise your baby has grown out of their newborn clothes again. In this first year, everything is new: the feelings, the routines, the worries, the joys. Your baby is learning the world—and you’re learning your baby.
No one quite prepares you for how consuming that first year can be. You’re not just feeding, rocking, changing, and soothing—you’re also constantly watching, waiting, and wondering. You ask questions you never imagined asking: “Should she be doing this already?” “Is it normal if he hasn’t done that yet?” “Why does every baby on Instagram seem ahead of me?” You find yourself measuring time not just by months but by milestones. First smile, first grip, first laugh, first word, first step. Each new skill feels monumental. And at the same time, the pressure can be intense.
It doesn’t help that our culture has turned baby milestones into benchmarks of parenting success. Charts, apps, social media posts, and unsolicited advice have all contributed to a quiet, persistent anxiety that you may not even recognise at first. But it’s there, creeping in every time your baby does—or doesn’t—do something “on time.” It can feel like a ticking developmental clock as if your baby’s every move is being tracked and graded.
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